Scrounging Tactics in Free‐Ranging Ravens, Corvus corax
- 30 October 2002
- Vol. 108 (11) , 993-1009
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1439-0310.2002.00832.x
Abstract
Social foraging allows individuals to scrounge, i.e. to exploit the food others have made available. The conditions promoting scrounging as an alternative foraging tactic have yet received limited attention. We presently examine whether ravens, as opportunistic scavengers, adjust their foraging tactics according to the potential costs involved in accessing a particular food source. We observed wild ravens foraging in a game park, at the enclosures of wolves, Canis lupus, and wild boars, Sus scrofa. Wolves may aggressively defend their food and even kill ravens, whereas wild boars do not. When co‐feeding with wolves, the ravens showed higher scrounging rates than with wild boars. Only at the wolves, they tended to specialize either on scrounging or on getting food directly from the site. However, scrounging techniques differed in relation to the state of food depletion. Early on, after food became available, the ravens most frequently displaced others from food, whereas towards the end, stealing, solicited sharing, and cache raiding became prevalent. These techniques differed in their profitability and their use was related to the scroungers’ age, social status and affiliative relationships. This suggests that ecological conditions, such as co‐feeding with potential predators, may influence the individuals’ decision whether or not to scrounge in competition for food. Social conditions, on the other hand, may affect the way how to get at food possessed by others and may thus, to a large extent, determine the profitability of scrounging.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Movement coordination and signalling in ravens ( Corvus corax ): an experimental field studyacta ethologica, 2001
- Daily Patterns of Optimal Producer and Scrounger Use under Predation Hazard: A State‐Dependent Dynamic Game AnalysisThe American Naturalist, 2000
- Evolutionarily stable stealing: game theory applied to kleptoparasitismBehavioral Ecology, 1998
- Social foraging: Producing and scrounging in a stochastic environmentJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1991
- Foraging by common ravens in the presence and absence of territory holders: an experimental analysis of social foragingAnimal Behaviour, 1991
- Producers, Scroungers, and Group ForagingThe American Naturalist, 1991
- Hunting behavior of wild chimpanzees in the Taï National ParkAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1989
- Foraging and Flocking Strategies: Information in an Uncertain EnvironmentThe American Naturalist, 1984
- Agonistic Interactions within a Winter Flock of Slate-coloured Juncos (Junco hyemalis) Evidence for the Dominants' StrategyZeitschrift Fur Tierpsychologie, 1983
- Foraging success in junco flocks and the effects of social hierarchyAnimal Behaviour, 1981